Anticipating the Post’s orders, Sen. Marco Rubio has been painting
Trump as a “scam artist” and “con artist,” with an “orange” complexion, a
“spray tan” and “tiny hands,” who is “unfit to lead the party of
Lincoln and Reagan.”

The establishment is loving Rubio, and the networks are giving him
more airtime. And Rubio is reciprocating, promising that, even if
defeated in his home state of Florida on March 15, he will drive his
pickup across the country warning against the menace of Trump.

Rubio, however, seems not to have detected the moral threat of Trump,
until polls showed Rubio being wiped out on Super Tuesday and in real
danger of losing Florida.

Before other Republicans submit to the ultimatum of the Post, and of
the columnists and commentators pushing a “Never Trump” strategy at the
Cleveland convention, they should ask themselves: For whom is it that
they will be bringing about party suicide?

That the Beltway elites, whose voice is the Post, hate and fear Trump is not only undeniable, it is understandable.

The Post beat the drums for the endless Mideast wars that bled and near bankrupted the country. Trump will not start another.

The Post welcomes open borders that bring in millions to continue the
endless expansion of the welfare state and to change the character of
the country we grew up in. Trump will build the wall and repatriate
those here illegally.

Trump threatens the trade treaties that enable amoral transnational
corporations to ship factories and jobs overseas to produce cheaply
abroad and be rid of American employees who are ever demanding better
wages and working conditions.

What does the Post care about trade deals that deindustrialize
America when the advertising dollars of the big conglomerates are what
make Big Media fat and happy?

The political establishment in Washington depends on Wall Street and K
Street for PAC money and campaign contributions. Wall Street and K
Street depend on the political establishment to protect their right to
abandon America for the greener pastures abroad.

Before March 15, when Florida and Ohio vote and the fates of Rubio
and Gov. John Kasich are decided, nothing is likely to stop the
ferocious infighting of the primaries.
But after March 15, the smoke will have cleared.

If Trump has fallen short of a glide path to the nomination, the war
goes on. But if Trump seems to be the near-certain nominee, it will be a
time for acceptance, a time for a cease-fire in this bloodiest of civil
wars in the GOP.

Otherwise, the party will kick away any chance of keeping Hillary
Clinton out of the White House, and perhaps kick away its future as
well.

While the depth and rancor of the divisions in the party are
apparent, so also is the opportunity. For the turnout in the Republican
primaries and caucuses has not only exceeded expectations, it has
astonished and awed political observers.

A new “New Majority” has been marching to the polls and voting
Republican, a majority unlike any seen since the 49-state landslides of
the Nixon and Reagan eras.

If this energy can be maintained, if those throngs of Republican
voters can be united in the fall, then the party can hold Congress,
capture the While House and reconstitute the Supreme Court.

Come the ides of March, the GOP is going to be in need of its uniters
and its statesmen. But today, all Republicans should ask themselves:

Are these folks coming out in droves to vote Republican really the
bigoted, hateful and authoritarian people of the Post’s depiction?

Or is this not the same old Post that has poured bile on
conservatives for generations now in a panic that America’s destiny may
be torn away from it and restored to its rightful owners?

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